PATIENT STORIES - American Tinnitus Association

PATIENT STORIES
Most recently I was fortunate
to attend Tinnitus Research
Initiative’s Tinnitus Conference
in Auckland, New Zealand.
I hugely enjoyed this event,
both because of what I learned
and because of who I met. Here
were 230 researchers, clinicians,
and audiologists from all around
the world who made the effort,
at considerable expense, to
gather and share their knowledge about tinnitus—all with
the same one goal: to find a
cure for tinnitus.
to provide hope to so many
fellow patients.
I am empowered by learning
about tinnitus and neuroscience, and I’m excited at the
work being done to better
understand and treat tinnitus.
A cure is the goal (tinnitus
management is the next
best thing), and I know we’ll
get there someday soon! I am
convinced that the way ahead
is for people at all levels of life
and all levels of tinnitus to
support tinnitus research.
I’ve been able to share
what I’ve learned with other
tinnitus patients through a
Chris Bedford credits his caring wife and the regular Editor’s Note: A version of this
patient-support newsletter
article appeared in the April
demands of his work and church activities with
I edit for the University of
2014 issue of Sounding Board.
keeping
his
spirits
up.
Aukland’s School of Public
ATA is sad to note the recent
Health, Audiology Section. This
passing of Joan Saunders, QSM, founder of the New
monthly newsletter, named Sounding Board, is the
Zealand Tinnitus Association and lifelong advocate
premier information resource for tinnitus and hyperfor tinnitus patients in New Zealand.
acusis patients here in New Zealand. Readership
has grown steadily with each issue, and I’m happy
Advertisement — ATA does not endorse or recommend any tinnitus products or treatments.
Summer 2014 | Tinnitus Today
11
There Is Always Hope:
My Experience with
Tinnitus and Osteopathy
By Theresa Cameron
ATA member since 2014
My experience with tinnitus began when I
was just twelve years old. I was lying in bed,
just about to drift off to sleep, when I heard
a faint ringing noise. I got out of bed to tell
my mother but was promptly sent back to my
room with the assurance that the noise would
go away. This was one of the few times my
mother was wrong.
The ringing did not go away. In fact, over the
following months it became louder and multi-tonal.
I also began to experience bouts of rhythmic clicking noises. I was filled with anxiety and greatly
perturbed by these noises that only I could hear.
In tandem with the problems I was experiencing
with my ears, I had also developed a severe case
of scoliosis. As my spine continued to twist and
my body became more and more misaligned, the
sounds in my ears changed and multiplied. At
age thirteen I had surgery to correct my scoliosis
through the insertion of metal rods that attached
to my spine. After this surgery, my tinnitus temporarily stopped changing. It didn’t get any better
but I was relieved that at least it wasn’t getting
any worse.
Unfortunately, at age twenty-eight, my tinnitus
began to change again. It started to slowly
increase in volume, bringing back old feelings
of dread and anxiety. I tried to remain calm—
I knew that stress could contribute to increased
tinnitus symptoms—but the volume continued to
grow. After several months, I began to experience
hyperacusis, an extreme sensitivity to noise, which
worsened until I couldn’t stand even the sound
12
Tinnitus Today | Summer 2014
of plates being stacked in the cupboard. Soon,
every noise I heard was followed by a painful
reverberation of sound inside my head.
Around this time I had to quit my job due to
increasingly severe pain and bouts of dizziness.
I took to my bed and soon found that my upper
body had become locked in place—I couldn’t
turn my head to either side, could barely open
my mouth, and could no longer lift my arms over
my head. My tinnitus had become so loud that I
was running several fans throughout the house,
day and night, in an attempt to block it out. At
times my left ear would be filled with a whooshing noise that pulsed in time with my heartbeat,
and I would occasionally hear high-pitched tinkling noises when I touched my left ear. I had a
lot of trouble sleeping and every waking moment
became an experience of the most acute misery.
I knew that I needed help. I consulted a general
practitioner who suggested that I had allergies,
but all my allergy tests came back negative. I
then visited an ear specialist who performed an
ear exam and ran a series of hearing tests. He
determined that I had early-onset hearing loss
and that nothing could be done for me. When I
tried to differentiate between losing my hearing
and having my hearing impaired by tinnitus, I was
told that these conditions were one in the same.
It was at this time that a friend urged me to visit
an osteopathic doctor. Following this suggestion
changed my life.
Osteopathy is a widely accepted form of complementary and whole-body medicine that focuses
specifically on the body’s musculoskeletal system.
Osteopathic physicians emphasize the importance
of restoring and maintaining normal body
mechanics as a key to most health conditions.